Seasonal Report Archive for The Loon | ||
The 1949-Winter Season 1 December 1949 through 28 February 1950 Mary Lupient |
December was mild and some species of' ducks lingered on the open waters in the Twin Cities. Forty-Blue-winged Teal were observed on Lake Harriet, Dec. 4 by Lewis Barrett. A census of Common Goldeneyes was taken at the Plymouth Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis by members of the Museum staff and it was estimated that about sixhundred wintered there. Several.flocks of Mallards were reported living in the spring-fed open waters along the Minnesota River. A report dated January 23 by the W. E. Petersons stated that a Wood Duck and a male Hooded Merganser were seen near Lake Vadnais, St. Pa'ul. The Duluth Club saw a Bufflehead on Lake Superior this season and the St. Cloud Club listed-eight Canvas-backs for their Christmas Census.
Canada Geese wintered again at Rochester. According to observers there were about one-thousand on Silver Lake February 13.
Eighteen members of the Minnesota Bird Club and six membe1·s of the Duluth Bird Club spent February 10 to 13 along the North Shore of Lake Super- ior from Duluth to the Pigeon River. .::.everal flocks of Oid Squaw Ducks were seen, a few American and Redbreasted Mergansers, one White-winged Scoter, a number of Golden-eyes and some Mallards were listed. At one point a Bald Eagle harassed a flock of Old Squaws by diving at them as they came up.
During this field trip the weather
was ideal, fair and about free:::ing.
Most of the participants were of the
opinion that Ravens and Old Squaws
were preseJ
Reports indicate that the Ringnecked
Pheasant has increased in numbers
over the past few years. This was
particularly noticable within a twentyfive
mile radius of the Twin Cities.
Flocks of forty or fifty could be seen
frequently.
This winter there was an exceptionally
heavy invasion of Snowy Owls. Dr.
W. J. Breckenridge stated that eightyfour
1·ecords were sent to the Museum
of Natural History from various sections
of the state, twenty-four of them
from the Red Lake area and vicinity.
Dr. Breckenridge expressed the opinion
that although this was a heavy invasion,
it would not be possible to say 1t
was the largest that has occurred due
to the fact that observers are now more
cooperative in reporting than here-tofore.
Also there are more observers in
the field. In Duluth Mrs. Evelyn Putnam
said a dead Snowy Owl was
1G
brought in. She also reported two dead
Tundra Swans, one of which >vas
brought in last fall by a man who
thought he had shot a Snow Goose.
The other had died of gun-shot wounds
and was found south of Fond du Lac
by hunters during Christmas week.
Reports of Mourning Doves came in
as follows: eleven near Red Wing,
Dec. 15, two in the same locality Jan.
4, 24 at Northfield Feb. 14 reported by
0. A. Rustad and the Mankato Audubon
Society listed 33 at Swan LakC'
for their Christmas Census.
A flock of about eight hundred Snow
Buntings was seen near Cooper's
Corners, 30 miles north of Minneapolis,
Feb. 1, by Mrs. Cora A. Corniea.
Franklin Willis drove west across the
state Dec. 31. He found Snow Buntings,
Lapland Longspurs and Horned
Larks feeding on the shoulders of the
highways in Chippewa, Renville, Nicollet
and Steele · Counties. In January
William Longley saw flocks of these
birds along the way from Marshall
to the Twin Cities.
Although Horned Larks were reported
wintering in the State, the
migration began the first week in
February. 0. A. Rustad stated that
they had arrived in small flocks around
Northfield February 6. Several observers
from around the Twin Cities reported
them from Feb. 10 to Feb. 15
and by Feb. 20 they were here in
force. Dr. MacCarty of Rochester l'eports
that two Fox Sparrows came to
his feeder station for a time during
February and that Evening G1·osbeaks
have appeared there in some numbers
this winter.
As usual a few American Robins and Meadowlarks
remained for the winter. Three
American Robins stayed at Duluth. A Goldencrowned
Kinglet was seen every day
at a feeder by Sheridan S. Flaherty,
Morris. This report was dated Jan. 22.
A small number of Red-tailed and
Rough-legged Hawks lived through the
season in southeastern Minnesota and
in the valleys of the Minnesota and
Mississippi Rivers. There were three
records of Northern Goshawks. Two Goiaen
Eagles were observed by William
Longley at Whitewater Valley and the
Duluth Club saw one on the Christmas
Census. About the usual number of
Bald Eagles were present throughout
the State.
That the Northern Cardinal is still extending
its range to the north and west is
borne out by this season's reports.
One, a male, was seen in January
near Walker by Lyman Newlin. During
last fall it had been seen almost
daily at a feeder. Mrs. J. A. Thabes,
Brainerd, wrote to say that a pair o:C
Northern Cardinals had been coming to her feed
er all winter. Four Northern Cardinals were
listed by the St. Cloud Club at Christmas.
0. A. Rustad saw twenty Northern Cardinals
at a feeding station near Carleton
College, Jan. 26, which may indicate
that the Northern Cardinal population is increasing.
A rare visitor, the Dark-eyed Dark-eyed Junco,
was seen by A. C. Rosewinkle and ten
other observers, Dec. 26, at Lake
Vadnais Forest near St. Paul. It was
with a flock of Dark-eyed Dark-eyed Juncos
and was observed again Jan. 4.
Another remarkable record was that
of an American Magpie that appeared
at a feeder owned by Mrs. Williams
in South Minneapolis. At the time of
this writing, March 1, it is still stopping
at the feeder regularly.
|
Species |
Information |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pigeons, Doves | |||||
Mourning Dove (Zenaida macroura) | Ten south-eastern states initiated an intensive study of the Mourning Dove in 1948. Each state has employed a trained biologist as dove project leader who is following an outline suggested by the Fish and Wildlife Service. Since the dove is migratory from southern Canada to Mexico, however, the complete picture of the life of this species cannot be obtained solely within those ten states. Observers in this region can help much by noting carefully such things as the following: location and number of all dove nests; number of broods raised; total production of young; nesting season; movement of juveniles and adults and wintering populations. Anyone desiring more detailed information concerning methods of conducting these kinds of studies should write to: Harold S. Peters, Fish and Wildlife Service, Glenn Building, Atlanta, Georgia. | ||||
Screech-Owls, Owls | |||||
Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus) | Flicker, Evening Grosbeak, and Tree Sparrow. Due to the fact that the mountain ash trees were denuded of berries by American Robins and other species in migration, Grosbeaks were scarce in the area covered by the trip. During the winter in Duluth about seventy-five Evening Grosbeaks came daily to a feeder. There was an influx of Evening Grosbeaks in southern, w e s t e r n and central Minnesota, due partly, no doubt, to the severity of the weather in January but the scarcity of food in the north was the main reason for their :t]pearance in such unusual numbers. In St. Paul A. C. Rosenwinkel saw several flocks of Evening Grosbeaks, some of them eating sunflower seeds at feeders. One flock fed on seeds of | ||||
Woodpeckers | |||||
American Three-toed Woodpecker (Picoides dorsalis) | White-breasted Nuthatch, Red-breasted Nuthatch, Blue Jay, Canada Jay, Black-capped Chick adee, Boreal Chickadee, Redpo!T, | ||||
Downy Woodpecker (Dryobates pubescens) | Hairy Woodpecker, | ||||
Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) | American |